RSCD3_ wrote:can't we just ask the 2012 people to vote between who they like more?
I agree. Leaving it as a tie would be awkward.
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RSCD3_ wrote:can't we just ask the 2012 people to vote between who they like more?
Quotatious wrote:RSCD3_ wrote:can't we just ask the 2012 people to vote between who they like more?
I agree. Leaving it as a tie would be awkward.
Peja Stojakovic wrote:Jimmy butler, with no regard for human life
Peja Stojakovic wrote:Jimmy butler, with no regard for human life
RSCD3_ wrote:Anyways about Wilt 64 vs 67
Wilt 64 had a large volume increase about 10-11 pts per 100 possessions roughly but Wilt 67 had a 10% higher TS%. That roughly scales out as 1 pt per 100 possessions vs one TS% point and while ideally the mix would be in the middle id rather have the higher efficiency one. His playoff scoring dropped to the relative same TS% as his 64 year on a lot lower volume so I'd call the scoring a tie. I think his defense was about the same in both years, and a lot of people chose 64 as higher so that's one a feather in 64 wilts cap. The big difference IMO is passing.
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thizznation wrote:RSCD3_ wrote:Anyways about Wilt 64 vs 67
Wilt 64 had a large volume increase about 10-11 pts per 100 possessions roughly but Wilt 67 had a 10% higher TS%. That roughly scales out as 1 pt per 100 possessions vs one TS% point and while ideally the mix would be in the middle id rather have the higher efficiency one. His playoff scoring dropped to the relative same TS% as his 64 year on a lot lower volume so I'd call the scoring a tie. I think his defense was about the same in both years, and a lot of people chose 64 as higher so that's one a feather in 64 wilts cap. The big difference IMO is passing.
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I had Wilt '67 originally and then I switched to '64. I decided the slightly prettier stats of '67 were more of a function of Wilt's superior team rather than a change in Wilt's personal skill. I also think he was more in his athletic prime in '64.
Peja Stojakovic wrote:Jimmy butler, with no regard for human life
trex_8063 wrote:1st ballot: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar '71/72/‘77
...
And ‘77 doesn’t absorb the same “water-down league” criticisms that some of Kareem’s other potential peak year seasons do. This was post-merger; all the Doctor J’s, Gilmores, Thompsons, Gervins, Issels, etc had joined the league…..and Kareem was still a clear stand-out.
otoh, '71 and '72 were both even more dominant (at least in the rs). '72, statistically speaking, was GOAT-level in-era dominance during the rs. '71 wasn't too overly far behind in the rs, and was better in the rs (part of title run). Though both years bear some criticism of being a weaker league.
Let's start with 1964:
vs Russell (8 games):
29.1 ppg. 26.9 rpg. 3.7 apg. 53.0% FG 42.9% FT
Playoffs (5 games):
29.2 ppg. 27.6 rpg. 2.4 apg. 51.2% FG 41.5% FT
vs Wayne Embry (9 games):
37.4 ppg. 21.6 rpg. 3.3 apg. (only 3 games) 53.7% FG (7 games) 53.5% FT
vs Zelmo Beaty (8 games):
31.3 ppg. 21.6 ppg. 2.5 apg. 54.3% FG 53.5% FT
Playoffs (7 games):
38.6 ppg, 23.4 rpg, 3.9 apg 55.9% FG 51.2% FT
vs Walt Bellamy (10 games):
35.0 ppg. 21.3 rpg. 6.0 apg. (6 games only) 55.0% FG (4 games only) 58.3% FT
He looks great vs great competition that year both in RS and playoffs.
!966:
vs Russell (9 games):
28.3 ppg. 30.7 rpg. 4.1 apg. 47.3% FG 54.0% FT
Playoffs:
28.0 ppg, 30.2 rpg, 3.0 apg 50.9% FG 41.2% FT
vs Bellamy (11 games):
33.0 ppg. 19.8 rpg. 5.0 apg. 56.5% FG 47.1% FT
vs Beaty (10 games)
29.0 ppg. 21.1 rpg. 4.1 apg. (missing one game) 54.8% FG 40.0% Ft
vs Thurmond (9 games):
28.6 ppg. 25.4 rpg. 4.4 apg. 48.9% FG 54.6% FT
I had Wilt '67 originally and then I switched to '64. I decided the slightly prettier stats of '67 were more of a function of Wilt's superior team rather than a change in Wilt's personal skill. I also think he was more in his athletic prime in '64.
So the man in question is Lebron James. Which year do you think was his best, and why?
http://rotosynthesis.rotowire.com:
LeBron in 2009 posted the highest PER and the most Win Shares since Michael Jordan was in his prime, the 2nd highest on-court/off-court +/- since 82games started tracking the stat in 2002 (behind only Garnett in 2003), led his team to 66 wins, and won the MVP by one of the largest margins ever with 97% of the highest MVP share possible. To put it in perspective, the only players since the NBA/ABA merger to post a higher MVP share than LeBron in ’09 were Larry Bird, Shaquille O’Neal, Michael Jordan, and Kevin Garnett. In the postseason LeBron posted the second-highest playoff PER in NBA history and swept through the first two rounds before running into a Magic team with more talent that was just a terrible match-up for the weaknesses of the Cavs.

thizznation wrote:RSCD3_ wrote:Anyways about Wilt 64 vs 67
Wilt 64 had a large volume increase about 10-11 pts per 100 possessions roughly but Wilt 67 had a 10% higher TS%. That roughly scales out as 1 pt per 100 possessions vs one TS% point and while ideally the mix would be in the middle id rather have the higher efficiency one. His playoff scoring dropped to the relative same TS% as his 64 year on a lot lower volume so I'd call the scoring a tie. I think his defense was about the same in both years, and a lot of people chose 64 as higher so that's one a feather in 64 wilts cap. The big difference IMO is passing.
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I had Wilt '67 originally and then I switched to '64. I decided the slightly prettier stats of '67 were more of a function of Wilt's superior team rather than a change in Wilt's personal skill. I also think he was more in his athletic prime in '64.
Peja Stojakovic wrote:Jimmy butler, with no regard for human life
RSCD3_ wrote:I found BBallref's per 100 possession estimates for each team
64 Wilt RS 32.1 PP100 15.1 RP100 4.3 AP100 on 53.7 TS%
64 Wilt PS 30.1 PP100 22.2 RP100 2.9 AP100 on 54.3 TS%
67 Wilt RS 19.6 PP100 19.7 RP100 6.3 AP100 on 63.7 TS%
67 Wilt PS 17.7PP100 23.7 RP100 7.3 AP100 on 54.6 TS%
and just to further that transferring his TS% and pace numbers to League average nowadays would give him
Corrected to 2015 PACE and League Averages ( and slight correction for the 3 minutes or so he had of rest )
64 RS 28.9 PPG 13.6 RPG 3.8 APG on 58.6 TS%
64 PS 27.1 PPG 20.0 RPG 2.6 APG on 59.3 TS%
67 RS 17.7 PPG 17.8 RPG 5.7 AP100 on 67.8 TS%
67 PS 16.0 PPG 21.3 RPG 6.6 APG on 58.7 TS%
AFTER seeing this and quotatious point I have decided to change my vote in my first post.

RSCD3_ wrote:I found BBallref's per 100 possession estimates for each team
64 Wilt RS 32.1 PP100 15.1 RP100 4.3 AP100 on 53.7 TS%
64 Wilt PS 30.1 PP100 22.2 RP100 2.9 AP100 on 54.3 TS%
67 Wilt RS 19.6 PP100 19.7 RP100 6.3 AP100 on 63.7 TS%
67 Wilt PS 17.7PP100 23.7 RP100 7.3 AP100 on 54.6 TS%
70sFan wrote:RSCD3_ wrote:I found BBallref's per 100 possession estimates for each team
64 Wilt RS 32.1 PP100 15.1 RP100 4.3 AP100 on 53.7 TS%
64 Wilt PS 30.1 PP100 22.2 RP100 2.9 AP100 on 54.3 TS%
67 Wilt RS 19.6 PP100 19.7 RP100 6.3 AP100 on 63.7 TS%
67 Wilt PS 17.7PP100 23.7 RP100 7.3 AP100 on 54.6 TS%
and just to further that transferring his TS% and pace numbers to League average nowadays would give him
Corrected to 2015 PACE and League Averages ( and slight correction for the 3 minutes or so he had of rest )
64 RS 28.9 PPG 13.6 RPG 3.8 APG on 58.6 TS%
64 PS 27.1 PPG 20.0 RPG 2.6 APG on 59.3 TS%
67 RS 17.7 PPG 17.8 RPG 5.7 AP100 on 67.8 TS%
67 PS 16.0 PPG 21.3 RPG 6.6 APG on 58.7 TS%
AFTER seeing this and quotatious point I have decided to change my vote in my first post.
Could you do this with 1962 and 1966 seasons? This would be nice
Peja Stojakovic wrote:Jimmy butler, with no regard for human life


Owly wrote:trex_8063 wrote:1st ballot: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar '71/72/‘77
...
And ‘77 doesn’t absorb the same “water-down league” criticisms that some of Kareem’s other potential peak year seasons do. This was post-merger; all the Doctor J’s, Gilmores, Thompsons, Gervins, Issels, etc had joined the league…..and Kareem was still a clear stand-out.
otoh, '71 and '72 were both even more dominant (at least in the rs). '72, statistically speaking, was GOAT-level in-era dominance during the rs. '71 wasn't too overly far behind in the rs, and was better in the rs (part of title run). Though both years bear some criticism of being a weaker league.
Brought this quote over here because it pertains to year choice.
On dilution I think it helps to think about what particular effects you think it has on a player and which of them you are discussing (and which are most important).
For instance is dilution being argued as lowering the average player level thus ("artificialy") lowering the "average" player and making a players metrics look better. If so against what point in time (and to what level is potential talent pool considered); this aspect is a bit onerous on a fast paced project but it helps to at least be thinking about these things, even if you don't necessarily have all the answers.
Is dilution lowering competition at the position specifically.
Then ABA versus internal expansion mixes things further.
I'm not sure there's a huge amount of ABA based dilution at center, through '71. The NBA's Jabbar would face Chamberlain, Reed, Thurmond, Unseld, Cowens, Lanier, Boerwinkle/Fox, Bellamy et al
ABA had Beaty as probably their best center, then Daniels, rookie Issel maybe (I'm not sure of him as an NBA center at this time), Ray Scott, rookie Paultz maybe, Mike Lewis?
Based on past performance we can be pretty confident Beaty would be a good NBA center, Daniels should be an above league average player (though if his stats drop as much as Beaty's rose in coming to the NBA, not substantially so), rookie Issel probably isn't an NBA center and certainly couldn't guard the position, Ray Scott based on his NBA career would probably be about league average and perhaps primarily a power forward.
The impact of internal expansion was somewhat mitigated initially (for '71 at least) by having the expansion teams face one another a lot (so the established teams had to do the same to a lesser degree) meaning lower positional matchup quality against such opponents would be somewhat mitigated.
Regardless of how highly one rates the ABA center crop (and it was, imo, just begining to start a significant upsurge), and how much one buys into the legendary status as translating into production for Unseld, Reed, Cowens and Thurmond in that particular year, it would be tough to argue Jabbar wasn't facing a deep crop of talented centers. I suppose a possible counter to that would be chicken-egg debate over whether a center dominated game is caused by center friendly rules thereby making centers look good, or whether talented, productive centers eleveted the standing of the position at that time simply by being good.
[color=#0000BF]The overall effect of expansion in terms of lowering the average player and thus pushing everyone up slightly is perhaps the more valid concern.[/color] Again, to this point the ABA didn't have that many players that you were confident were good NBA players (Barry, Beaty, Daniels and Issel - though moving into '72 this is beginning to change). But there were more teams including more NBA teams and so it would be hard to strongly reject dilution claims, though as mentioned earlier it is hard to know what this means in real terms (more jobs, but is ABA competition which pushes up wages also leading to people who wouldn't have become basketball players doing so? To what extent do we know the potential talent pool?).
Just some things to think about in terms of Kareem's peak and expansion etc.

RSCD3_ wrote:I found BBallref's per 100 possession estimates for each team
64 Wilt RS 32.1 PP100 15.1 RP100 4.3 AP100 on 53.7 TS%
64 Wilt PS 30.1 PP100 22.2 RP100 2.9 AP100 on 54.3 TS%
67 Wilt RS 19.6 PP100 19.7 RP100 6.3 AP100 on 63.7 TS%
67 Wilt PS 17.7PP100 23.7 RP100 7.3 AP100 on 54.6 TS%

SideshowBob wrote:
FWIW I will be vouching for 2013 here. Of his "prime" years (post 08 Olympics) here's how I rank them
2013
2010
2009
2014
2012/2015
2011